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Give
it up, Mr. Mugabe
Rejoice
Ngwenya
June 27, 2012
Twenty years
ago this month I married. Time is not a measure of bliss. We know.
Thirty-two years of tyranny bred popular discontent. Yet as a political
activist, it-s not often that one gets in one brushstroke
- a marriage anniversary and the mauling of ZANU-PF by a now
potent SADC bulldog. Agony of our oppressors on one-s anniversary
is worthy of UNESCO 7th wonder accolade!
30% marriages
are vulnerable to dissipation in their first five years. I deserve
a Nobel Peace Prize! Being not the easiest of co-habitation characters,
I have an insatiable desire for marital literature keeping my over-blown
ego under control. A Seventh Day Adventist colporteur added to my
'how to- collection the title 'Highly Effective
Marriages- by family life counselor Nancy Van. She makes a
compelling case on how men destroy marriages by ignorance of what
makes wives tick. I wish it was like in politics - restore
the rule of law, constitutionalism and respect for people-s
choice - bingo - a perfect institution!
The book 'The
Fear - the last days of Robert Mugabe- by Zimbabwean
journalist Peter Godwin grips me not on its articulate narration
of ZANU-PF-s June 2008
madness, but that my marriage has coincided with President Mugabe-s
most rabid tyrannical misdemeanors since Gukurahundi! ZANU-PF hijacked
the entire 20 years of my marriage!
My wife tolerates incorrigible commentaries on 'what could
have been for us- had Mugabe retired in 1999. For every violent
election I have voted in, every protest article written and every
political conference I have attended in the last 20 years, I explain
to her it was in honour of Zimbabweans traumatized by President
Mugabe-s brutal reign. We differ in our perspectives, but
for me, anything short of democratisation vigilante would be a big
yawn. Now that she accepts me as a rebel, I would wish the next
twenty years of our marriage ZANU-PF free. That-s a distinct
possibility. But the 20-year question is he finally prepared to
abandon the trajectory of impunity and call it quits in 2013? Discent
Bajila writes: "Any self-respecting 88-year-old would have
found reason to exit the political scene especially after spending
more than three decades presiding over moments of madness, natural
resource plunder ..."
My anniversary
month has been dramatic: ZANU-PF mutant generals Trust Mugoba, Martin
Chedondo, Doughlas Nyikayaramba, entrenching perpetuated cult worshipping;
Aqualinah Katsande and Newton Kachepa of Mudzi allegedly opening
the political murder account; Navanethem Pillay showing
President Mugabe the red card; his charm offensive to the SADC organ
on politics, defence and security yielding nothing but Michael 'Sata-rical-
thorns and thistles; former Liberian dictator Charles Taylor on
a 50-year incarceration while a South African court successfully
argues
that ZANU-PF cronies be prosecuted. On any other day, this quantum
of embarrassment would compel any dictatorship to abdicate but no,
ZANU-PF insists it-s still the 'people-s choice-.
President Mugabe-s
propagandists continue spewing anti- democracy vitriol, accusing
us of celebrating 'pyrrhic- victory. Their umbrage will
not deter us, if not only to incense us into a Tahrir Square-like
hallucination! As the fires of internal dissent are fanned by the
so-called succession war, I take comfort in how the District Chaotic
Committee elections will for once deliver the mortal blow to ZANU-PF!
Big screen greats
like Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, Sylvester Stallone, Will
Smith, Angelina Jolie and Wesley Snipes have at one stage single-handedly
apprehended fundamentalist lunatics holed up in some abandoned warehouse.
When the bad guy is cornered, the last words the villain would remember
alive is something like, "ZANU-PF, this is Captain Democracy.
You-re completely surrounded. Come out with your hands up
and save your life!"
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